Editor’s Note: I tried to simultaneously watch six networks Saturday
morning and three all day so know I missed a lot, especially from CNN which I
barely saw, but I think I caught a lot of very biased material which in the
interest of timeliness I’m putting out in this unusual Sunday edition.

On
the up side: Janet Reno’s snatching of Elian wiped out Earth Day coverage.
None of the cable news networks aired any live coverage Saturday afternoon of
the rally on Washington’s Mall hosted by Leonardo DiCaprio.

To stay with Elian coverage CNN dumped its scheduled
Saturday night at 10pm ET special, People Count: Hot on the Trail, hosted by
Jane Fonda.

NBC Nightly News covered nothing but Elian while the CBS
Evening News was all Elian except for the 15 seconds it took anchor Russ
Mitchell to run down three other headlines, including a ten word mention of
Earth Day: "Thousands across America marked the 30th anniversary of Earth
Day." On ABC’s World News Tonight, anchor Elizabeth Vargas squeezed in
23 seconds on people marking Earth Day and plugging ABC’s then-upcoming
prime time special, Planet Earth 2000.

Newsweek’s Evan Thomas was unable to distinguish
between the need for a normal sidearm and a large, high-powered weapon, blamed
the breakdown in negotiations on the Miami family’s "bogus, paranoid
fear" that if sent to DC Elian would be spirited out of the country by
Cuban diplomats, and described Reno as "principled" and
"apolitical."

-- Backing the raid. On
CNN’s Capital Gang Mark Shields insisted: "This was the right decision
to make by every definition."

Al Hunt, Executive Washington Editor of the Wall Street
Journal, agreed: "It’s whether you believe in the rule of law, which is
what they did today, Kate. Precisely what they did. And what happened today
took three minutes, that’s all it took. No one was hurt, no one was killed,
the child got out safely...that was a very successful mission."

Over on a freshly taped edition of Inside Washington
shown on many PBS station, but produced at the Gannett-owned CBS affiliated
WUSA-TV in Washington, DC, which ran the updated show at 7pm Saturday night,
Evan Thomas and Nina Totenberg backed Reno’s move.

Host Tina Gulland asked: "Did she have to do
this?" Thomas, Newsweek’s Assistant Managing Editor, maintained:
"I think so. If you listen to the Miami relatives, there’s more time,
the negotiations were going on, they were betrayed, but I think, I’m
sympathetic to Reno this was just going to drag on forever. And that Lazaro,
who’s not the most dependable person, was going to keep pulling the plug on
it, so I think she did have to act."

NPR reporter Nina Totenberg chimed in: "You woke up
and you saw these pictures and any human being would have said, this poor
child. And within moments, Lazaro was outside saying ‘If I’d had a gun it
would have been different.’ Well that’s why they went in with guns."

Columnist Charles Krauthammer said "it was a
disgrace," before Jack Germond
argued: "The fact is, she should have done this a month ago. But she had
to do it. It was done about at clinically as you could do given the family and
the situation."

-- Guns are guns. Talking
about the AP photo showing a U.S. Border Patrol officer holding what CBS’s
Jim Stewart identified as an "MP-5 automatic weapon," Thomas
asserted: "I think it was actually a fairly well-executed raid. And of
course they’re going to have guns. They don’t know what, no federal law
enforcement official would go into a situation like this unarmed, although
it’s an unfortunate photo."

Evans missed the point that maybe more competent
officers wouldn’t have had to use the same high-powered weapons they employ
when capturing violent felons, especially not the officers who went into the
bedrooms to get Elian.

-- Miami family
irrationally "paranoid." Thomas chastised the family’s insistence
on the proposed joint living arrangement being located in Florida:
"The Miami family
is just obsessed with the idea that it had to be in Miami. They were afraid
that if they went to Washington -- this is literally what they were afraid of
-- that Elian would be put in the trunk of the car and shipped out to Cuba by
diplomatic immunity. And that therefore it had to be on their own turf.
Elian’s father wanted it to be in Washington. He didn’t want to have to go
back down to Miami."
Host Tina Gulland:
"How could they think it could be in the interest of the Justice
Department to have Elian snuck out of the country when clearly the point is
that he has to stay for the hearing?"
Thomas: "Their
argument was the Justice Department couldn’t stop it because the Cuban
Interest Section would claim diplomatic immunity. This was a bogus, paranoid
fear. But it is one of the reasons why these negotiations derailed."

Just as "bogus" and "paranoid" a
fear as that over 100 civilian federal agents, outfitted military style with
helmets, visors and high-powered guns, would surround their house before dawn
as eight or so burst inside to grab a six-year-old?

As for Gulland’s question, it’s hard to know if
she’s stupid or just naive. The whole purpose of all the Justice Department
has done over the past few months has been to reunite Elian with his father in
Cuba. They were on the other side of the court ruling that Elian must stay in
the U.S. pending a hearing.

-- "Principled"
Reno. Charles Krauthammer assessed Reno: "She’ll be remembered as the
Attorney General who did Waco and the Attorney General who gave us that awful
picture of the boy and the gun. That’s how she’ll be remembered."
Thomas countered:
"I think that’s totally unfair. I think that Reno really comes through
this as somebody who may have made mistakes, but was principled about it and
unlike most people in Washington, who are trying to figure out the political
aspect of it, seemed quite apolitical about it. She may have been stumbling
around in the dark, but she really gave off the vibes of somebody who was
trying to work out a solution."

The
best part of any breaking news event: Rather Raw. Saturday morning Dan Rather
maintained that "It’s hard to see how she [Reno] gets criticized for
the way the operation was carried out"; insisted "Castro feels a
very deep and abiding connection" to Cubans and "was sincere when he
said, ‘listen, we really want this child back here’"; worried about
how the AP photographer in the bedroom had violated Elian’s privacy; said
"slightly veiled hands" are "behind the maneuvering on both
sides of this case"; cut into Marisleysis’s house tour to express
concern for "fairness and for balance." And, he cried. Or at least
pretended to.

Sometime before 6:45am ET CBS went live with The
Saturday Early Show team plus Rather and stayed on the air until 12 noon,
though Washington’s CBS affiliate went to cartoons for five minutes at 11am
ET. (ABC News came on for a couple of hours around 7am ET and returned for
another half hour wrapped around Clinton’s 10:25am statement. NBC was live
with the Today team from before 6:45. Washington’s NBC-owned station went to
local news just past 9am and to regular shows at 10, not even returning for
Clinton.)

From April 22 CBS News coverage:

-- 7:02am ET. Dan Rather: "Janet Reno, the Attorney
General whose been criticized in a lot of quarters, and depending on one’s
point of view perhaps justifiably so, did demonstrate patience all the way
through. One wants to remember she went to Miami herself to try to negotiate
something. It’s hard to see how she gets criticized for the way the
operation was carried out. Yes you can say well the Marshals should not have
been dressed that they were dressed, they shouldn’t have been armed that
heavily. Put all that in quotation marks. But in the end it worked. The child
was gotten out safely."

-- 7:04am ET. Rather: "While Fidel Castro, and
certainly justified on his record, is widely criticized for a lot of things,
there is no question that Castro feels a very deep and abiding connection to
those Cubans who are still in Cuba. And, I recognize this might be
controversial, but there’s little doubt in my mind that Fidel Castro was
sincere when he said, ‘listen, we really want this child back here.’"

-- 8:02am ET. Rather, briefly breaking into Reno’s
press conference after a question about the photo with the officer holding the
huge gun: "Even if the photographer was in the house legally, which
knowing the Associated Press would be very surprising if he wasn’t, there is
the question of the privacy, beginning with the privacy of the child. No one
can look at these photographs and not think what this child is going
through."

-- 8:45am ET. Rather to CBS News legal consultant Andrew
Cohen: "What about the child’s rights, does the child have a right to
privacy, is it possible, is there any legal basis, for the family of the
child, perhaps the father, to sue the Miami relatives for allowing the
child’s privacy to be, as they might say, trampled is this case, or is there
no legal case to be made for that?"
Cohen: "I think
there is a case. I think that’s an excellent scenario..."

-- 8:48am ET. After consultant Pam Falk said church
groups are paying for Greg Craig and the Miami family is getting lawyers
pro-bono or paid by the Cuban American National Foundation, Rather spun moral
equivalence: "The only point here is, as with so many stories, you have
to follow the dollar to understand what’s really happening because they have
been, if not hidden hands, at least slightly veiled hands behind the
maneuvering on both sides of this case."

-- 9:24am ET. Talking over the live tour of the damage
to the house and what happened conducted by Marisleysis with pool reporter
Kerry Sanders, Rather felt compelled to caution viewers: "We want to pick
up some more of this I think as it goes along, but it’s important for
accuracy, for fairness, and for balance to point out that so far the relatives
in Miami have dominated the imagery and the sounds of this morning."

Dan Rather caring about fairness and balance? Now
that’s a novel concept.

-- 9:36am ET. Rather started crying. He recalled:
"Among the many images and sounds of this morning, this has to be one
that really gets through to the heart. That the immigration service says that
the female agent who carried little Elian from his home, from the home of
these distant relatives in Miami, talked to him in Spanish and she says the
message, worked out in advance, to the child, was, and I quote: ‘This may
seem very scary, but it will soon be better.’ She says Elian was told he was
being taken to Poppa, the word that he uses for his father. And then the
father and son also talked by telephone later during Elian’s flight to
Washington."
Choking up, Rather
continued: "If you just pause for a second, you can kind of imagine this
child [voice breaks up as he looks down shaking head] wow."

Janet
Reno "truly cares" for children, CBS News reporter Jim Stewart
claimed. At about 9:03am ET, just after showing the photo of the SWAT team guy
with a MP-5 as he reached to take Elian out of the fishing man’s arms,
Stewart related:
"We all know now
that you can be rest assured that will be the bookend on Janet Reno’s tenure
as Attorney General, that and Waco on the other end. It is appalling from her
perspective because of the true compassion she has for children. If you’ve
ever seen her around children you know how much she truly cares for them and
this has got to be tearing at her."

If she "truly
cares" for children I’d hate to see what kind of overkill firepower she
would put in such close proximity to those she doesn’t care about.

Did
Reno’s action violate the ruling of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals? No,
according to ABC legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin, but FNC legal analyst Andrew
Napolitano charge the court ruling "was flagrantly disobeyed by the
federal government" which conducted
"a high class kidnapping...sanctioned by no law."

-- ABC News. At about 8:55am ET, anchor Elizabeth Vargas
asked: "And Jeffrey Toobin, our ABC News legal analyst, you maintain
Janet Reno was well within her legal right to stage that raid, aggressive
though it was."

As transcribed by MRC
analyst Jessica Anderson pitching in on Saturday, Toobin contended: "I
think one of the things we have to keep in mind is that attitudes toward this
raid, towards this whole issue are very different in South Miami than they are
in the rest of the country. I think in the rest of the country, the attitude
has not been how dare she do this, is what took her so long? And the fact is,
Lazaro Gonzalez has not had legal custody to this child for either seven or
nine days, depending how you count, but certainly he didn’t have it anymore.
He had been in clear defiance of the Attorney General....
"Look, the law
says that the father gets custody, period, and Juan Miguel and his advisors,
Gregory Craig, had said look, we’ll talk about anything as long as it begins
with custody returning to the father, and that was something that the Miami
relatives were never going to agree to, so I think it is true that Janet Reno,
you know, may have had a lot of hope, but in fact these negotiations were
destined for failure. And as amazing as it may have seemed months ago, this
violent raid was -- violent without any injuries -- was the only way this was
ever going to be resolved."

-- Fox News Channel. Just a few minutes earlier, FNC
viewers had heard quite a different take. At about 9:40am ET FNC legal analyst
Andrew Napolitano told anchor David Asman: "One of the reasons that we
have such a basically peaceful and free society is because we have an
independent judiciary and we have moral suasion behind the rulings of courts.
Here the ruling of the court was flagrantly disobeyed by the federal
government."

Asman asked which order. Napolitano explained: "The
order issued by the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals four days ago, which said
once the INS chooses the guardian, and the INS chose Lazaro Gonzalez to be the
guardian, and an application for asylum has been made by the guardian, the INS
can not change the guardian and that’s exactly what they did here."
Asman: "So is this
executive overreach?"
Napolitano: "This
is more than executive overreach. This is contempt of the circuit court of
appeals order. This is a high class kidnapping is what it is, sanctioned by no
law, sanctioned by no judge..."

FNC
challenged Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder over the legal basis of the
raid and asked if the overnight negotiations were "a ruse," but
neither CBS News or MSNBC raised either issue in live Saturday morning
interviews with Holder.

Appearing on FNC after CBS and before he went on MSNBC,
Holder was asked by FNC anchor David Asman at 9:45am ET about the negotiations
which went until 4:30am: "Was this all a ruse for the raid, the
negotiations which took place this morning?"

FNC legal analyst Andrew Napolitano then got into an
argument with Holder: "Isn’t it true that the 11th Circuit Court of
Appeals, this is Judge Napolitano, that the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals just
last week said that the INS, once having chosen Lazaro Gonzalez as the
guardian, could not now make a change? And the INS has no discretion under the
statutes but to hear the asylum application because it was made by the
guardian it chose?"

Holder dismissed it as a "preliminary"
finding, prompting Napolitano to demand: "Isn’t it clear in that court
of appeals ruling, preliminary though it may be, that the court ruled that the
INS may not do exactly what it did this morning, which is, without a court
order, change the guardian of this child. When is the last time a boy, a
child, was taken at the point of a gun without an order of a judge.
Unprecedented in American history."
Holder: "He was
not taken at the point of a gun."
Napolitano: "We
have a photograph showing he was taken at the point of a gun."
Holder: "They were
armed agents who went in there who acted very sensitively..."

Napolitano pressed again: "Why didn’t you go to a
judge and get a court order to transfer custody like every other custody
transfer in the history of this country has occurred, instead of using
authoritarian jackboot tactics like putting the muzzle of a gun in the face of
a six-year-old boy?"

(A few hours later, at 12:42pm ET, FNC’s other legal
analyst, Stan Goldman, checked in from Los
Angeles and disagreed with Napolitano: "I think they had the right to do
it...no where in this opinion does it say anything that would prevent the
government from going in and getting Elian. In fact, it says just the
opposite. It says look, we are only going to rule on the fact he can’t leave
the country. We’re not going to rule on who’s got custody of him. It was
very clear on that point and that was a very clear signal I think to the
Justice Department, to Janet Reno that even the 11th circuit was not going to
stop her from going in and getting this boy." But Goldman did agree that
there "is no precedent" for not having a court order before seizing
a child.)

Journalists
"laughed" at fears about the feds grabbing people’s guns, but
"after this picture today," of the officer holding a gun in front of
Elian, "no one can laugh at that picture because it’s real,"
suggested Chris Matthews on MSNBC on Saturday afternoon.

At 1:52pm ET MSNBC anchor Brian Williams asked Matthews
if the use of such force to go into a private home could be added to the list
of incidents which have fueled the "patriot" movement, such as Ruby
Ridge and Waco. Matthews answered in part:
"We have laughed
in the big cities, I should say among journalists, about the black helicopter
image of a federal police force, or even UN force coming to grab their guns or
take them away. We’ve always laughed at that. Well after this picture today
no one can laugh at that picture because it’s real. When the federal
government moves under this administration under this Attorney General,
perhaps in these times, it move swiftly, dramatically and it uses military
force to the highest degree visible. I mean I’ve never seen a kid facing an
automatic weapon in my life like that."

Matthews made a similar observation later on MSNBC’s
special 7pm ET Saturday edition of The News with Brian Williams.

Castro
wants to send a bunch of Cuban kids to the U.S. to keep Elian company, NBC’s
Jim Avila cheerfully reported from Havana on Saturday’s NBC Nightly News.
"Among those ready to go," is a classmate who is "all packed,
new clothes, a fresh school uniform and school supplies." But, Avila
asserted, "There’s no way of knowing how much choice in the matter
Cecilia really has." What "choice"?

Avila also again showcased how Castro will house Elian
in a "beachfront mansion," but instead of portraying it as a place
for "re-education" and indoctrination, Avila benignly relayed that
Castro just "wants to re-create Elian’s classroom and surround him with
hometown friends."

NBA basketball, which went until 8pm ET/7pm CT, bumped
NBC Nightly News in at least those time zones, but prompted by the big news
day MSNBC aired it at 6:30pm ET.

Avila passed along how "Cuban writer Miguel Barnett
described his people as wounded by the long ordeal, but grateful."
Barnett: "We want
to see him very soon arriving at the airport."
Avila laid out Cuba’s
propaganda line: "The only official rally, originally scheduled as a
protest in Juan Miguel’s home province, turned into a national party
featuring an appearance by Castro himself. The Cubans insist since that if
Elian can’t come home to Cuba, part of Cuba should be given visas to join
Elian in the United States."

Over video of a girl, a suitcase and then other school
kids playing, Avila trumpeted: "Among those ready to go, Elian’s
classmate, six-year-old Dianela Catejas (sp?), all packed, new clothes, a
fresh school uniform and school supplies, one of twelve children Castro has
outfitted for the trip, demanding U.S. State Department visas for them. Her
mother Cecilia Macias, says Dianela was picked because of her good grades and
her friendship with Elian. There’s no way of knowing how much choice in the
matter Cecilia really has, but she told NBC News, and our Communist Party
escort, she supports the mission despite natural concerns about sending her
daughter to a foreign country."
Cecilia Macias:
"As a mother, I feel worried, tense, but I know there are a lot of people
that will look after the kids."

Over video of Elian’s
Cardenes classroom and then the "mansion," Avila concluded:
"The Cuban
government says it wants to re-create Elian’s classroom and surround him
with hometown friends both in the U.S. and when he returns to Cuba. Desks and
other Cardenes school house supplies, have already been sent to Havana and
installed in a beachfront mansion chosen to house Elian, his parents and
friends when he comes back."

I guess it’s no concern that all the other kids will
be separated from their fathers. At least Avila is probably clueless as to
"knowing how much choice in the matter" the other parents have.

The
MS in MSNBC should stand for "Minimal Substance." Saturday night FNC
stayed live with Elian interviews, call-ins and coverage until 1am ET while
CNN remained with the story until going to sports at 11pm ET. But MSNBC had
different news priorities. They sent everyone home at 9 and talked about
Barbara Eden.

-- 9pm ET/6pm PT:
CNN: A fresh Larry King Live about Elian
FNC: Hannity & Colmes interviews/debate about Elian
MSNBC: Repeat of a Weekend Magazine, which itself
is a compilation of repeats of Dateline shows. Lead story: a month-old piece
on flammable mattresses.

-- 10pm ET/7pm PT:
CNN: Live special newscast about Elian
FNC: More live discussions/coverage about Elian
MSNBC: Repeat of a Headliners & Legends profile of Barbara Eden

-- 11pm ET/8pm PT
CNN: Dropped Elian, but still delivered live hour-long Sports Tonight in its
usual time slot
FNC: Continuing live Elian discussion, interviews and call-ins
MSNBC: Repeat of Time & Again about Star Trek